20,910 research outputs found
Defect Formation and Kinetics of Atomic Terrace Merging
Pairs of atomic scale terraces on a single crystal metal surface can be made
to merge controllably under suitable conditions to yield steps of double height
and width. We study the effect of various physical parameters on the formation
of defects in a kinetic model of step doubling. We treat this manifestly non-
equilibrium problem by mapping the model onto a 1-D random sequential
adsorption problem and solving this analytically. We also do simulations to
check the validity of our treatment. We find that our treatment effectively
captures the dynamic evolution and the final state of the surface morphology.
We show that the number and nature of the defects formed is controlled by a
single dimensionless parameter . For close to one we show that the
fraction of defects rises linearly with as . We also show that one can arrive at the final state faster and with
fewer defects by changing the parameter with time.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures. To be submitted to Phys. Rev.
Invasion threshold in heterogeneous metapopulation networks
We study the dynamics of epidemic and reaction-diffusion processes in
metapopulation models with heterogeneous connectivity pattern. In SIR-like
processes, along with the standard local epidemic threshold, the system
exhibits a global invasion threshold. We provide an explicit expression of the
threshold that sets a critical value of the diffusion/mobility rate below which
the epidemic is not able to spread to a macroscopic fraction of subpopulations.
The invasion threshold is found to be affected by the topological fluctuations
of the metapopulation network. The presented results provide a general
framework for the understanding of the effect of travel restrictions in
epidemic containment.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Solution of an infection model near threshold
We study the Susceptible-Infected-Recovered model of epidemics in the
vicinity of the threshold infectivity. We derive the distribution of total
outbreak size in the limit of large population size . This is accomplished
by mapping the problem to the first passage time of a random walker subject to
a drift that increases linearly with time. We recover the scaling results of
Ben-Naim and Krapivsky that the effective maximal size of the outbreak scales
as , with the average scaling as , with an explicit form for
the scaling function
The history and characteristics of troodos and olympus rose clover
ROSE CLOVER is being produced and used in increasing quantities in south-western Australia. The first line named was designated Kondinin and five lines have now been given cultivar (variety) names.
One of the first samples of rose clover, C.P.I. 13949, introduced into Western Australia proved to be a mixture of two very similar types, differing visibly only in leaf markings.
The mixed sample was named Troodos,* and the selection from it, Olympus.
This paper describes the origin of the two varieties, their history and characteristics
The history, characteristics and potential of Kondinin rose clover
Experimental and field performances of rose clover over fen years suggest that it will be increasingly used as a pasture legume in south-western Australia.
A number of lines differing in maturity and leaf markings have been selected locally and given cultivar (variety) names
The first of these lines to be selected was designated Kondinin. This paper describes its origin, history, characteristics and performance
Dynamics and Steady States in excitable mobile agent systems
We study the spreading of excitations in 2D systems of mobile agents where
the excitation is transmitted when a quiescent agent keeps contact with an
excited one during a non-vanishing time. We show that the steady states
strongly depend on the spatial agent dynamics. Moreover, the coupling between
exposition time () and agent-agent contact rate (CR) becomes crucial to
understand the excitation dynamics, which exhibits three regimes with CR: no
excitation for low CR, an excited regime in which the number of quiescent
agents (S) is inversely proportional to CR, and for high CR, a novel third
regime, model dependent, here S scales with an exponent , with
being the scaling exponent of with CR
A Mesolithic settlement site at Howick, Northumberland: a preliminary report
Excavations at a coastal site at Howick during 2000 and 2002 have revealed evidence for a substantial Mesolithic settlement and a Bronze Age cist cemetery. Twenty one radiocarbon determinations of the earlier eighth millennium BP (Cal.) indicate that the Mesolithic site is one of the earliest known in northern Britain. An 8m core of sediment was recovered from stream deposits adjacent to the archaeological site which provides information on local environmental conditions. Howick offers a unique opportunity to understand aspects of hunter-gatherer colonisation and settlement during a period of rapid palaeogeographical change around the margins of the North Sea basin, at a time when it was being progressively inundated by the final stages of the postglacial marine transgression. The cist cemetery will add to the picture of Bronze Age occupation of the coastal strip and again reveals a correlation between the location of Bronze Age and Mesolithic sites which has been observed elsewhere in the region
Slow epidemic extinction in populations with heterogeneous infection rates
We explore how heterogeneity in the intensity of interactions between people
affects epidemic spreading. For that, we study the
susceptible-infected-susceptible model on a complex network, where a link
connecting individuals and is endowed with an infection rate
proportional to the intensity of their contact
, with a distribution taken from face-to-face experiments
analyzed in Cattuto (PLoS ONE 5, e11596, 2010). We find an extremely
slow decay of the fraction of infected individuals, for a wide range of the
control parameter . Using a distribution of width we identify two
large regions in the space with anomalous behaviors, which are
reminiscent of rare region effects (Griffiths phases) found in models with
quenched disorder. We show that the slow approach to extinction is caused by
isolated small groups of highly interacting individuals, which keep epidemic
alive for very long times. A mean-field approximation and a percolation
approach capture with very good accuracy the absorbing-active transition line
for weak (small ) and strong (large ) disorder, respectively
Generalized Integer Partitions, Tilings of Zonotopes and Lattices
In this paper, we study two kinds of combinatorial objects, generalized
integer partitions and tilings of two dimensional zonotopes, using dynamical
systems and order theory. We show that the sets of partitions ordered with a
simple dynamics, have the distributive lattice structure. Likewise, we show
that the set of tilings of zonotopes, ordered with a simple and classical
dynamics, is the disjoint union of distributive lattices which we describe. We
also discuss the special case of linear integer partitions, for which other
dynamical systems exist. These results give a better understanding of the
behaviour of tilings of zonotopes with flips and dynamical systems involving
partitions.Comment: See http://www.liafa.jussieu.fr/~latapy
High Energy Physics from High Performance Computing
We discuss Quantum Chromodynamics calculations using the lattice regulator.
The theory of the strong force is a cornerstone of the Standard Model of
particle physics. We present USQCD collaboration results obtained on Argonne
National Lab's Intrepid supercomputer that deepen our understanding of these
fundamental theories of Nature and provide critical support to frontier
particle physics experiments and phenomenology.Comment: Proceedings of invited plenary talk given at SciDAC 2009, San Diego,
June 14-18, 2009, on behalf of the USQCD collaboratio
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